Friday, July 19, 2013

New rulers losing public support fast: Syed Munawar Hasan


LAHORE, : Ameer, Jamaat e Islami, Pakistan, Syed Munawar Hasan, has said, the new government was losing public support fast as the people who voted them to power were disappointed by its poor performance so far.
Addressing the Friday congregation at Mansoora, he said the rulers had forgotten their election promises and the PML-N leader who had set up a protest camp at the Minar e Pakistan against load shedding during the previous government, had now become the target of public wrath for the same reason.
Syed Munawar Hasan said, the economic crisis in the country had deepened and added that it wont

take long when it might turn into a political crisis. He said if the rulers failed to tide over the situation, the general public could decide some extreme steps. He said perhaps, the general public was cool due to the holy month of Ramazan and if the things did not improve, the anti government protests could intensify and the political and religious parties would also be forced to stand by the masses.
The JI Ameer termed as most unfortunate Islamabad’s silence over the stunning revelation by the Indian Deputy Secretary Home, before a law court that India itself engineered the Mumbai attacks and the attack at the Indian parliament. He said the  Foreign Office had issued a brief statement that they were in touch with New Delhi and would give a reaction after reply was received from New Delhi. Syed Munawar Hasan said such an indifferent attitude showed Pakistani rulers who had earlier been spineless against the US, were now lacking courage against India as well. In such a background, the report of a back door diplomacy with India, was shocking for the nation. If the rulers did not change their outlook, the people would rise against them.
Referring to the trial of the JI leaders in Bangladesh for co called war crimes, Syed Munawar Hasan, said that the struggle of Prof. Ghuam Azam and his colleagues to save Pakistan from a split was lawful. He said it was a pity that the Pakistan government had abandoned the people who offered sacrifices for the unity of the country when it should have contested their cases.
He said, the Hasina Wajid government in Bangladesh was trying to save its fast losing image and also to escape a crushing defeat in the coming elections.
Massive rallies show Dhaka government has become unpopular

No comments:

Post a Comment